PCS general secretary FRAN HEATHCOTE explains why opposing war is inseparable from defending jobs, wages and public services – and why readers should come to the London Peace Conference on Saturday June 20
Sarah Jones was just four months old when a Christmas postcard addressed to her dropped through the letterbox of her parent's home in December 1984.
Sent in solidarity by a family living in the Belgium industrial town of Hasselt, its cartoon cover shows two miners marching together through a snow storm.
On the reverse is a typed message for miners and their families in English and Flemish.
The once beating heart of British journalism was undone by technological change, union battles and Murdoch’s 1986 Wapping coup – leaving London the only major capital without a press club, says TIM GOPSILL
MIKE QUILLE applauds an excellent example of cultural democracy: making artworks which are a relevant, integral part of working-class lives
The Home Secretary’s recent letter suggests the Labour government may finally deliver on its nine-year manifesto commitment, writes KATE FLANNERY, but we must move quickly: as recently as 2024 Northumbria police destroyed miners’ strike documents


